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Creators/Authors contains: "Johnson, David S"

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  1. Abstract Species across the planet are shifting or expanding their ranges because of climate change. These are climate migrants. Although climate migrants are well documented, their impacts on recipient ecosystems are not. Climate migrants that are also ecosystem engineers (species that modify or create habitats) will likely have profound effects on ecosystems. The Atlantic marsh fiddler crab,Minuca pugnax, is a burrowing crab that recently expanded its range into the northeastern United States. In its historical range,M. pugnaxenhances the aboveground growth of the cordgrassSpartina alterniflora, a plant critical to marsh persistence. In a control‐impact study, however, we found thatSpartinaaboveground biomass was 40% lower whenM. pugnaxwas present. Thus, the positive effect ofM. pugnaxonSpartinaaboveground biomass flipped to a negative one in its expanded range.Spartinabelowground biomass was also 30% lower on average when crabs were present, a finding consistent with what is seen in the historical range. These impacts onSpartinaare likely due to burrowing byM. pugnax.Benthic microalgae was, on average, 45% lower when crabs were present. Fiddler crabs eat benthic microalgae, and these results suggest that fiddler crabs can control algal biomass via grazing. Because fiddler crabs reduced the biomass of foundational primary producers in its expanded range, our results imply thatM. pugnaxcan influence other saltmarsh functions such as carbon storage and accretion as they expand north. Most strikingly, our results suggest that as species expand or shift their range with climate change, not only can they have profound impacts in their new ranges but those impacts can be the inverse of what is seen in their historical ranges. 
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  2. Abstract As sea‐level rise converts coastal forest to salt marsh, marsh arthropods may migrate inland; however, the resulting changes in arthropod communities, including the stage of forest retreat that first supports saltmarsh species, remain unknown. Furthermore, the ghost forest that forms in the wake of rapid forest retreat offers an unknown quality of habitat to marsh arthropods. In a migrating marsh in Virginia, USA, ground‐dwelling arthropod communities were assessed across the forest‐to‐marsh gradient, and functional use of ghost forest and high marsh habitats was evaluated to determine whether marsh arthropods utilized expanded marsh in the same way as existing marsh. Diet and body condition were compared for two marsh species found in both high marsh and ghost forest (the detritivore amphipod,Orchestia grillus, and the hunting spider,Pardosa littoralis). Community composition differed among zones along the gradient, driven largely by retreating forest taxa (e.g., Collembola), marsh taxa migrating into the forest (e.g.,O. grillus), and unique taxa (e.g., Hydrophilinae beetles) at the ecotone. The low forest was the most inland zone to accommodate the saltmarsh speciesO. grillus, suggesting that inland migration of certain saltmarsh arthropods may co‐occur with early saltmarsh plant migration and precede complete tree canopy die‐off. Functionally,O. grillusoccupied a larger trophic niche in the ghost forest than the high marsh, likely by consuming both marsh and terrestrial material. Despite this, both observed marsh species primarily consumed from the marsh grass food web in both habitats, and no lasting differences in body condition were observed. For the species and functional traits assessed, the ghost forest and high marsh did not show major differences at this site. Forest retreat and marsh migration may thus provide an important opportunity for generalist saltmarsh arthropods to maintain their habitat extent in the face of marsh loss due to sea‐level rise. 
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  3. Abstract A parasite can change its host’s behavior in spectacular ways. When the saltmarsh amphipod Orchestia grillus (Bosc, 1802) is infected with the trematode Levinseniella byrdi (Heard, 1968) it is bright orange and is found in the open unlike uninfected individuals. I tested the hypothesis that infected amphipods are found in the open because L. byrdi reverses their innate photophobia. During daytime treatments and when placed in a dark chamber, 0% of the uninfected and 20% of the infected amphipods, on average, moved to the light chamber after 30 minutes. When placed in a light chamber, 91% of the uninfected and 53% of the infected amphipods, on average, went to the dark side after 30 minutes. These results clearly indicate that O. grillus is normally photophobic, but not drawn to light when infected with L. byrdi. Instead, L. byrdi appears to neutralize the amphipod’s photophobia. Uninfected O. grillus are typically found under vegetation. I hypothesize that O. grillus with L. byrdi infections wander into open, unvegetated habitats randomly. In addition, 94% of infected amphipods could be touched by a finger in the field suggesting they can be easily caught by predators. Levinseniella byrdi infects at least three other amphipod hosts, Chelorchestia forceps (Smith & Heard, 2001), Uhlorchestia spartinophila (Bousfield & Heard, 1986), and U. uhleri (Shoemaker, 1930). The parasite-manipulation hypothesis suggests that the parasite-induced changes (conspicuous body color and neutralized light response) are adaptive for L. byrdi to make amphipod hosts more susceptible to bird predators, the definitive hosts. This hypothesis remains to be tested. 
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  4. Abstract We document changes in U.S. children's family household composition from 1968 to 2017 with regard to the number and types of kin that children lived with and the frequency of family members' household entrances and departures. Data are from the U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics (N = 30,412). Children experienced three decades of increasing instability and diversification in household membership, arriving at a state of “stable complexity” in the most recent decade. Stable complexity is distinguished by a decline in the number of coresident parents; a higher number of stepparents, grandparents, and other relatives in children's households; and less turnover in household membership compared with prior decades, including fewer sibling departures. College-educated households with children were consistently the most stable and least diverse. On several dimensions, household composition has become increasingly similar for non-Hispanic Black and White children. Children in Hispanic households are distinct in having larger family sizes and more expected household entrances and departures by coresident kin. 
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  5. In New England saltmarshes, mummichogs (Fundulus heteroclitus) connect the vegetated marsh and creek food webs by opportunistically foraging on the invertebrate communities of the marsh surface when access is permitted by tidal flooding and marsh-edge geomorphology. Via their movements, mummichog represent a critical food web node, as they can potentially transport energy from the marsh surface food web to creek food web and exert top-down control on the communities of the vegetated marsh surface. Here, we demonstrate that access to the marsh surface (afforded by marsh-edge geomorphology) did not impact mummichog distribution across the marsh platform and exhibited no evidence of top-down control on their invertebrate prey. Thus, mummichogs function as initial nodes in the trophic relay, unidirectionally moving energy from the vegetated marsh to the creek food web. Reduced marsh surface access via altered marsh-edge geomorphology results in a 50% to 66% reduction in total energy available to aquatic predators via this route. Estuarine systems are intimately connected to coastal and offshore systems via consumer mediated flows of energy; thus, disruptions to the trophic relay from the marsh surface at the tidal creek scale can have far reaching impacts on secondary productivity in multiple disparate systems and must be accounted for in considerations of impacts to future food-web function. 
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  6. Eberly, Janice; Stock, James H. (Ed.)
  7. null (Ed.)
    Abstract The Atlantic marsh fiddler crab, Minuca pugnax (Smith, 1870), is a climate migrant that recently expanded its range northward into the Gulf of Maine. We tracked the M. pugnax population within the Great Marsh, in northeastern Massachusetts, USA, since it was first detected in 2014 using burrow counts. Because burrow counts can overestimate fiddler-crab density, we used camera traps to determine the relationship between burrow densities and fiddler-crab densities in 2019. The burrow count surveys show a six-fold increase in the density of M. pugnax in the Great Marsh from 2014 to 2019. Results indicates that the fiddler-crab population in the expanded range is established and growing. Based on burrow counts, however, the density of M. pugnax in the expanded range (6 burrows m–2) remains much lower than those found in the historical range (up to 300 burrows m–2). Based on the camera traps, we determined that burrow counts overestimated fiddler-crab densities by 47% in 2019. There was, on average, one crab detected for every two burrows observed. This result suggests that estimates of densities of M. pugnax based on burrow counts should be reduced by half. Minuca pugnax is an ecosystem engineer that can influence saltmarsh functioning and the magnitude of that influence is related to its density. Our results imply that the populations of M. pugnax in the expanded range are currently having minor impacts on marshes relative to larger populations in the historical range, but their impact will increase as the populations grow. 
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